One lesson about grammar is that it isn't proper to use a double negative, like...I didn't say nothing. (Should be "I didn't say anything." There, now you can't say I ain't ne'er taught ya nothing lol!!!)However, today, DOUBLE NEGATIVE is rocking out - the new novel by author C. Lee McKenzie

About DOUBLE NEGATIVE

Hutchison Mc Queen is a sixteen-year-old
smart kid who screws up regularly. He’s a member of Larkston High’s
loser clique, the boy who’s on his way to nowhere—unless juvenile hall counts as a
destination. He squeaks through classes with his talent for eavesdropping and
memorizing what he hears. When that doesn’t work, he goes to Fat Nyla, the one
some mean girls are out to get and a person who’s
in on his secret—he
can barely read. And then Maggie happens. For twenty-five years she’s
saved boys from their own bad choices. But she may not have time to save Hutch.
Alzheimer’s disease is steadily stealing her keen mind.

And to add to the awesomesauce, there's a giveaway you simply have to enter :-)a Rafflecopter giveawayDo you have a common phrase that you know is just all kinds of wrong but it feels right saying it anyway?

I am way too spoiled here. Two lovely ladies, yes your lovely self and the lovely Lee. How lovely, he states.

Of course, I know nothing. However, I avoid common phrases like the plague. At the end of the day, you know, you know what I'm saying, to be honest, to be perfectly honest, I have no idea what I'm rambling on about.

Same difference. Things ain't what they used to be. Course, as an ex-Brit now living with a different language, I might spout phrases that sound wrong or completely right to you. More likely you're thinking I'm just waffling = talking drivel... Congratulations, Lee! ~Miriam